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Food purchase behaviour in a Finnish population: patterns, carbon footprints and expenditures

Meinila_etal_2024_PublHealthNutr_Food_purchase_behaviour.pdf
Meinila_etal_2024_PublHealthNutr_Food_purchase_behaviour.pdf - Publisher's version - 1.3 MB
How to cite: Meinilä J, Hartikainen H, Tuomisto HL, et al. Food purchase behaviour in a Finnish population: patterns, carbon footprints and expenditures. Public Health Nutrition. 2022;25(11):3265-3277. doi:10.1017/S1368980022001707

Tiivistelmä

Objective: To identify food purchase patterns and to assess their carbon footprint and expenditure. Design: Cross-sectional. Setting: Purchase patterns were identified by factor analysis from the annual purchases of 3435 product groups. The associations between purchase patterns and the total purchases’ carbon footprints (based on life-cycle assessment) and expenditure were analysed using linear regression and adjusted for nutritional energy content of the purchases. Participants: Loyalty card holders (n 22 860) of the largest food retailer in Finland. Results: Eight patterns explained 55 % of the variation in food purchases. The Animal-based pattern made the greatest contribution to the annual carbon footprint, followed by the Easy-cooking, and Ready-to-eat patterns. High-energy, Traditional and Plant-based patterns made the smallest contribution to the carbon footprint of the purchases. Animal-based, Ready-to-eat, Plant-based and High energy patterns made the greatest contribution, whereas the Traditional and Easy-cooking patterns made the smallest contribution to food expenditure. Carbon footprint per euros spent increased with stronger adherence to the Traditional, Animal-based and Easy-cooking patterns. Conclusions: The Animal-based, Ready-to-eat and High-energy patterns were associated with relatively high expenditure on food, suggesting no economic barrier to a potential shift towards a plant-based diet for consumers adherent to those patterns. Strong adherence to the Traditional pattern resulted in a low energy-adjusted carbon footprint but high carbon footprint per euro. This suggests a preference for cheap nutritional energy rather than environment-conscious pur chase behaviour. Whether a shift towards a plant-based pattern would be afford able for those with more traditional and cheaper purchase patterns requires more research.

ISBN

OKM-julkaisutyyppi

A1 Alkuperäisartikkeli tieteellisessä aikakauslehdessä

Julkaisusarja

Public Health Nutrition

Volyymi

25

Numero

11

Sivut

Sivut

3265-3277

ISSN

1368-9800
1475-2727